For most American travelers choosing between Air France and Lufthansa, the comparison starts and ends in a place that has nothing to do with the airline itself: your credit card points. Flying Blue transfers from Chase, Amex, and Citi. Miles & More links to United, Air Canada, and Singapore via Star Alliance. If your frequent flyer currency already lives in one ecosystem, the practical choice is usually predetermined before you look at anything else.
When the choice is genuinely open, it gets interesting. Air France won more airline-of-the-year honors in 2026 than in any prior year. Lufthansa is mid-way through Allegris, the most ambitious cabin overhaul in its history, now flying on A350s from Munich and 787-9s from Frankfurt. Both airlines are excellent. They are not the same airline. The differences that matter most are the carry-on weight enforcement, the Wi-Fi situation, which hub connects better to your onward routing, and which loyalty program you want to build status in.
Short version: Air France edges Lufthansa for in-flight quality and carry-on practicality in 2026. Lufthansa edges Air France for global network breadth and Star Alliance access. The full story depends on your route.
What We Looked For
- Business class hard product, since this is where the two airlines diverge most sharply and where most high-spend travelers will encounter the real difference
- Carry-on and checked bag policies, where Lufthansa’s 8 kg weight limit creates genuine friction for travelers who pack normally
- Alliance membership, since SkyTeam versus Star Alliance is the primary practical differentiator for frequent flyers
- Wi-Fi and in-flight connectivity, where Air France has pulled meaningfully ahead
- On-time performance at Paris CDG versus Frankfurt and Munich, two very different hub experiences
- Loyalty program value for US-based travelers, where transfer partner access shapes how much your miles are actually worth
Which airline charges less for bags, Air France or Lufthansa?
Both include one checked bag on longhaul Standard economy fares and both strip it on Light fares. The meaningful gap is the carry-on weight allowance: Air France allows 12 kg combined versus Lufthansa’s 8 kg, which is actively enforced at German gates.
The carry-on rules are where most economy travelers run into a real difference.
Air France permits one cabin bag (up to 55x35x25 cm) plus one personal item (up to 40x30x15 cm), with a combined weight limit of 12 kg. That is enough for a packed rollaboard plus a laptop bag without getting weighed.
Lufthansa permits one carry-on (up to 55x40x23 cm) plus one personal item (up to 40x30x10 cm), but the carry-on weight limit is 8 kg. This limit is enforced. A standard rollaboard packed with clothing for four days can exceed 8 kg. If it does, Lufthansa will ask you to check it, and fees apply.
Checked bags on transatlantic routes work similarly for both airlines. Economy Standard and Classic/Flex fares include one checked bag (23 kg). Economy Light fares on both airlines exclude checked bags: Air France charges approximately $60 to add one at booking, Lufthansa charges a comparable fee published in EUR.
- Winner for carry-on weight allowance: Air France (12 kg combined vs 8 kg enforced)
- Winner for carry-on dimensions: Lufthansa (55x40x23 is marginally wider than AF’s 55x35x25)
- Winner for longhaul checked bag inclusion: Tie (both include on standard fares)
- Winner for Light fare carry-on policy: Tie (both allow carry-on, neither includes checked bag)
Which airline has better business class?
Both rank among the world’s best. Lufthansa Allegris is the more architecturally innovative product. Air France Business is more consistently deployed across the fleet and warmer in service and food. Which is better depends on whether Allegris is actually on your route.
Lufthansa Allegris. The new cabin has been flying on A350s from Munich for over a year and on 787-9s from Frankfurt since October 2025. As of April 2026, Lufthansa operates eight 787-9 aircraft from Frankfurt with Allegris, and 21 more are on order with full delivery by end of 2027. Allegris Business offers five distinct seat types: Business Seat, Business Seat Plus, Business Suite, Business Suite Plus (fully enclosed), and a Double Suite for traveling pairs. All have direct aisle access in a 1-2-1 layout. The fully enclosed Suite Plus pods are among the best in the industry.
The catch: Allegris is not on every route. Many Lufthansa transatlantic flights still operate on older A330 or 747 aircraft with the previous generation staggered cabin. Check your specific flight. A FRA-JFK on a 787-9 may have Allegris. The same route on a 747-8 does not.
Air France Business. Air France Business Class on the 787 and newer-configured 777s offers lie-flat beds in a 1-2-1 layout with privacy partitions and a product built around food, design, and French aesthetic. The airline’s catering is genuinely outstanding, the wine program is among the best in longhaul flying, and service consistency has improved significantly since the pandemic. On the older 777 fleet without the full renovation, the product is less impressive.
Air France is also rolling out free Starlink Wi-Fi fleet-wide, expected complete by end of 2026. Lufthansa’s onboard Wi-Fi remains a paid service on most aircraft.
Economy and Premium Economy. Both airlines pitch standard economy at approximately 31 to 32 inches, which is typical for the cabin class. Both offer Premium Economy products with wider seats, more pitch (roughly 38 to 40 inches), and improved meal service. Air France Premium Economy has a strong reputation; Lufthansa’s is solid but slightly narrower in seat width.
- Winner for business class hard product: Lufthansa Allegris (when on your route)
- Winner for business class consistency fleet-wide: Air France (Allegris still deploying)
- Winner for business class food and wine: Air France
- Winner for Wi-Fi on any fare: Air France (free Starlink rolling out)
- Winner for Premium Economy: Air France (marginally better seat width)
Which airline has better on-time performance?
Air France earned the top airline ranking across multiple 2026 evaluations and consistently outperformed Lufthansa on on-time metrics in 2025. Lufthansa ran approximately 83 percent on-time in 2025, affected by Frankfurt labor actions and airport congestion.
Both airlines operate at large European hub airports with inherent congestion exposure. CDG and Frankfurt regularly rank among Europe’s busiest airports, and both carriers deal with ATC delays, ground handling constraints, and weather disruptions.
Air France has improved meaningfully on operational consistency and earns higher marks in the 2026 airline rankings than it did in prior years. Lufthansa’s 2025 on-time rate of approximately 83 percent was dragged by several periods of Frankfurt disruption, though the airline’s Munich hub typically performs better.
Recovery matters at hub airports. Both Air France and Lufthansa operate at their respective hubs with multiple daily flights to most major US cities, meaning a missed connection or cancelled departure usually has a same-day alternative.
- Winner for on-time performance: Air France (ranked ahead of Lufthansa in 2025-2026 metrics)
- Winner for hub operational resilience: Air France CDG, slightly
Does Air France or Lufthansa fly to more destinations?
Lufthansa’s two-hub model (Frankfurt plus Munich) and Star Alliance membership give it broader global connectivity. Air France’s CDG hub provides more direct US city options from a single departure point, plus SkyTeam access to Delta’s US network.
Air France operates from Paris CDG to a wide range of US cities including New York (JFK), Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Miami, Boston, Washington, Atlanta, Seattle, Phoenix, and Houston, plus extensive European and African routes. Via SkyTeam, Air France miles earn on Delta domestically and KLM transatlantically.
Lufthansa operates from Frankfurt and Munich. Frankfurt is one of the largest aviation hubs in Europe and connects to all major US cities plus a huge network across Africa, the Middle East, and Asia via Star Alliance. Munich offers more selective routes but with generally higher service ratings. Star Alliance gives Lufthansa passengers seamless connections on United (the largest US Star Alliance carrier), Air Canada, Singapore Airlines, ANA, and Turkish.
For US travelers who primarily fly United domestically, the Lufthansa-Star Alliance ecosystem is the more integrated option. For Delta-loyal travelers, the Air France-SkyTeam relationship with Delta provides domestic connections under a single loyalty program.
- Winner for direct US gateway options: Air France (single CDG hub, many nonstop US cities)
- Winner for global network breadth: Lufthansa (two hubs plus Star Alliance)
- Winner for connection to US domestic carriers: Depends on whether you fly Delta (Air France) or United/Air Canada (Lufthansa)
Is Flying Blue or Miles & More the better loyalty program?
Flying Blue is more accessible to US-based travelers in 2026. Miles & More offers strong value within the Lufthansa Group but fuel surcharges on partner awards limit practical value.
Flying Blue (Air France and KLM) earns at 4 to 10 miles per dollar depending on route and fare class. Average redemption value runs about 1.2 cents per mile, but the Promo Rewards dynamic pricing regularly offers 20 to 30 percent discounts on specific routes, pushing business class redemptions to 2 to 3 cents of value per mile. Critically for US cardholders, Flying Blue transfers from Chase Ultimate Rewards, Amex Membership Rewards, Citi ThankYou, and Capital One at 1:1. Status tiers are Silver, Gold, Platinum, and Ultimate.
Miles & More (Lufthansa Group, plus partners) is strong for travelers who concentrate flying within Lufthansa, Swiss, Austrian, and Brussels Airlines. First Class redemptions on Lufthansa metal offer excellent value, often at 60,000 to 87,500 miles for a transatlantic award. The program’s weakness is fuel surcharges on partner awards, which can add $400 to $800 per person to a “free” flight on a partner carrier. Miles & More also has fewer US credit card transfer partners than Flying Blue.
For an occasional transatlantic traveler accumulating points through a US credit card, Flying Blue is the easier and typically more rewarding path. For road warriors specifically concentrated on Lufthansa Group flying, Miles & More has underrated value in premium cabin redemptions.
- Winner for US credit card transfer access: Flying Blue
- Winner for dynamic award pricing: Flying Blue (Promo Rewards)
- Winner for First Class redemption value: Miles & More (on Lufthansa metal)
- Winner for fuel surcharge transparency: Flying Blue (lower surcharges)
Who Should Pick Air France
- Your loyalty points are in Flying Blue, Chase, Amex, or Citi, and you want to accumulate in the SkyTeam ecosystem
- You fly Delta domestically and want seamless longhaul connections under one loyalty umbrella
- You want free Wi-Fi included on your transatlantic flight without choosing a specific fare class
- You pack a carry-on above 8 kg and need a more forgiving weight policy
- You value food, design, and a more sensory cabin experience over architectural novelty
- Your route departs from CDG, which connects directly to your US gateway
Who Should Pick Lufthansa
- You fly United or Air Canada domestically and want Star Alliance connections to complete your itinerary
- Allegris is deployed on your specific FRA or MUC route and you want one of the best business class hard products flying today
- You travel frequently to Asia, Australia, or South America through Star Alliance partners (Singapore, ANA, Turkish, TAP)
- Frankfurt or Munich connects more efficiently to your onward European destination
- You have Miles & More status and want to build on it
- You are traveling via Switzerland, Austria, or on other Lufthansa Group carriers
The Bottom Line
Air France and Lufthansa are close enough that most travelers will be happy on either. The differences are real but they are matters of degree, not kind.
The practical tie-breakers are these: if your credit card points transfer to Flying Blue and you fly Delta domestically, choose Air France. If your miles are in United’s MileagePlus and you want seamless Star Alliance connections, choose Lufthansa. If you have no loyalty constraints and Allegris is on your route, the 787-9 Allegris product from Frankfurt is worth going out of your way for. If you are in economy and care about a free carry-on above 8 kg without being weighed at the gate, Air France is more forgiving.
The one area where Air France has a clear 2026 edge across all travelers: free Wi-Fi, fleet-wide, no login required. Lufthansa still charges. On a nine-hour transatlantic flight, that matters.
For more comparisons, see Air France vs KLM and Lufthansa vs British Airways.